7 Reasons Why The Right Should Not Seek to Convert The Left

Those who think Dennis Prager took a decade to write one book will find themselves mistaken upon picking up Still the Best Hope: Why the World Needs American Values to Triumph. The 30-year talk radio veteran and longtime syndicated columnist actually delivers a trilogy of books mapping out the big ideological fights of today with greater clarity than anyone else.

Don't let the 440 pages intimidate. The three books within Still the Best Hope are:

220 pages defining Leftism as a religion, explaining why its adherents embrace their beliefs, the techniques used to manipulate people into joining the political cult, and the price the world paid during the 20th century enduring the movement's quests to remake the world.

70 pages defining Islam and Islamism, the relation between the two, and their moral record.

And 80 pages -- a single chapter -- laying out America and Its Unique Values, as symbolized by three terms struck on our coins: "Liberty," "In God We Trust," and "E Pluribus Unum." These pillars of American exceptionalism stand in opposition to the political theologies of Leftism and Islamism which value Equality over Liberty, Idolatry over God, and group rights over universal human rights.

Taken alone, each section stands as a succinct summary, analysis, and polemic. Even those already well-versed in the subject matter will appreciate Prager's innovative arguments, precise research, respectful manner, and inviting prose voice. It's a portable distillation of everything that makes The Dennis Prager Show so engaging each day.

Also making the leap from Prager's radio program is an emphasis on a subject many would rather avoid: the effect political ideas have on the lives and personalities of those who embrace them.

Leftist ideas are not just wrong because they bankrupt governments but because the people who advocate for them suffer in their personal lives. One example Prager provides is how the messages young women hear about sex at college can lead them down paths they'll later regret.